Canto

  1     1|          life forego?~No! let me die; 'twere happiness above~
  2     3| vengeance of Celano's kind.~Then die, cut off in manhood's early
  3     3|     Italian, Frank, and Spaniard die.~ ~ LVI~"Lo! who in priestly
  4     4|        kill, than he was bent to die.~To know who was the necromancer
  5     4|      little season,~Is doomed to die a Christian, and by treason.~ ~
  6     4|          would find the means to die.~But ope thy gates to give
  7     4|   husband, for the offence shall die.~Nor is there hope of ransom
  8     4|         And must a gentle damsel die by fire,~Because she with
  9     4|         damsel should deserve to die;~And ween unjust, or else
 10     5|    despair,~He there resolved to die; and, to that end,~Planted
 11     5|          sense has dispossessed?~Die for a woman! rather let
 12     5|         in show;~But resolute to die, in his intent~Was little
 13     5|      existence, and preferred to die.~ ~ LXIV~" `He was her lover;
 14     5|     choose, but doom the maid to die.~ ~ LXVII~"I do not think
 15     5|        deserve, or merit not, to die,~Arrests some ladies of
 16     5|          real end) was doomed to die.~ ~ LXXIV~"For secretly
 17     6|        my cause the royal damsel die;~My death too bitter and
 18     6|           And in the cause shall die: nor this would move;~But
 19     8|      unless she pass the sea, to die,~As insecure in Europe,
 20     8|        with further ill~Before I die, is yet thy cruel will.~ ~
 21     8|      what more is left me but to die?~Almighty God, with every
 22     9|           when I am slain, shall die content,~Who to my spouse
 23     9|        slain, shall by his order die."~ ~ LVII~Here her discourse,
 24    10|      hope he long deferred, will die:~For other such his fickle
 25    10|        thee a thousand deaths to die.~ ~  XXX~"But grant, e'en
 26    10|      laments her that she cannot die.~ ~ LVI~No fairy dies, or
 27    10|         cannot at their pleasure die.~ ~ LVII~Return we, where
 28    11|        he tempted Eve to eat and die~With the apple, hardly wrought
 29    11|       alas! are dead, or have to die,~So many noble lords and
 30    12|     their hands Rogero might not die,~Brought here by old Atlantes'
 31    13|          sate his ill desire, to die.~When menace had by him
 32    14|       bitterer in such a mode to die,~Than death itself, does
 33    14|      pounding stake~Strangely to die the death of frog or snake.~ ~
 34    14|          read~That it was ill to die in any way,~And near two
 35    14|      lett'st thy faithful people die:~ ~ LXXI~"And, for one faithless
 36    14|         honour and for Christ to die;~Who, eager to assail the
 37    16|        the Moor outside of Paris die,~Within the Sarzan so destroys
 38    16|       though he should waste and die."~ ~ III~Let him lament,
 39    16|     forlorn,~Who but deserved to die ere they were born.~ ~ XXIV~
 40    16|         conducted thither but to die.~ ~ LIII~It seemed as if
 41    16|      lance;~Destined by these to die a youth in France.~ ~  LXXIII~
 42    17|         desire beside my wife to die.'~ ~ XXX~"He afterwards
 43    17|          Lucina, and near her to die,~Than to live far from her,
 44    17|       him thither but arrived to die,~Who cannot hinder her from
 45    17|        pines, -- and only cannot die.~ ~ LXI~"Morning and evening,
 46    18|      teeth he clove, and left to die;~Though of good temper was
 47    18|         of thee, Medoro mine? To die~With thee in arms is better,
 48    18|      prisoners to their band, or die,~Some here, some there,
 49    19|      with Medoro willingly would die,~But who would not for death
 50    19|          of vain desire will not die,~Must help herself, nor
 51    19|        toil and labour long~Must die, save they be strongest
 52    20|        was brought out by lot to die,~In fane by Orontea built,
 53    20|         be,~Ask but like such to die with arms in hand,~And not
 54    20|         the stripling should not die,~Should he display such
 55    20|      vile a service, I desire to die."~ ~ LXV~Here Guido ceased
 56    20|        day should by this weapon die,~Wert thou with me, at least,
 57    20|     twere that by my hand should die~The martial race, encompassed
 58    20|        the press these smothered die.~Broken is many an arm,
 59    20|    Justice sent (that they might die~By that good paladin) Anglante'
 60    21|        like traitor and assassin die,~Upon her tale, in ignominious
 61    22|          to a youth condemned to die~This very day, within a
 62    22|        warrant that he shall not die."~Rogero, who the kindly
 63    22|       stripling in the fire will die."~ ~ LVII~"Regard we not
 64    22|        my head, for I consent to die."~ ~ LXXVIII~So Aquilant,
 65    22|       their fall,~As if about to die, the warrior spied.~He wondered
 66    23|          is no fear that he will die to-day;~God thitherward
 67    23|  innocent, and wrongly doomed to die.~ ~ LVII~And, after he had
 68    24|          eyes,~By dooming him to die, or live in pain;~Loud neighing,
 69    24|          comfort she beholds him die;~Since every city is too
 70    24|      without a guide,~And not to die, distresses me alone.~For
 71    24|   content, and fully blest~Would die, since I should die upon
 72    24|        Would die, since I should die upon thy breast.~ ~ LXXIX~"
 73    25|        of the youth condemned to die;~And, for the enterprise
 74    25|  dispersing, leave their mate to die,~And only to their own escape
 75    25|        Unless it were his lot to die before,~He would in deed
 76    27|         teeth of dog, is wont to die~The fox, together with her
 77    27|        make such search before I die,~Rather before my hair shall
 78    28|         long an absence, and not die with pain.~ ~ XIII~"For
 79    28|    deemed that in his arms would die~The wife from whom he was
 80    28|        answered her) thus let me die?~Let me, at least, exhale
 81    28|        thou depart, will make me die content.'~ ~ LX~"To him
 82    29|      happy was that other not to die!~Who risqued his neck in
 83    30|          their ears his clamours die:~For of such freight none
 84    30|      without the other shall not die.~With you to die excites
 85    30|       shall not die.~With you to die excites in me no fear;~With
 86    30|          I:~Yet would I fain not die so ill content,~As I should
 87    30|         ill content,~As I should die if you before me went."~ ~
 88    32|      erwhelming wretchedness.~To die at strife with thee alone
 89    32|         me."~ ~ XLIV~Resolved to die, 'twas so the damsel cried;~
 90    32|       Marphisa, too, before~Thou die, thou yet may deadly vengeance
 91    32|        desperation and desire to die.~ ~ XLVII~The vest is of
 92    32|        to win the buckler, or to die~Beneath his hand who has
 93    33|      bait, like poisoned mullets die.~ ~ XV~"Where Childibert
 94    33|          And -- each resolved to die or else his name~Forthwith
 95    34|      mothers, pined~With hunger, die, and see their daily bread,~--
 96    34|         forfeit all,~And, after, die in bonds, a captive thrall.~ ~
 97    34|      said not that he should not die,~That so he meant to say
 98    35|   willingly, although it were to die:~In that she, ever with
 99    36|       shalt thou be.~Rather than die alone and of despite,~I
100    36|          you justly, I unjustly, die,~Deem I that thine is equal
101    36|        Unless I speak with you I die.~Hear me, for love of heaven! --
102    36|      desires may be appaid,~Will die; but strive, in yielding
103    36|         my breath,~She too shall die, the occasion of my death."~ ~
104    36|         XLVII~Bradamant who will die, or in that just~Will put
105    37|        he enjoyed her, he should die;~He deemed that, when the
106    37|        death bestow:~Resolved to die, she leapt, in her despair,~
107    37|          can, if she resolves to die,~Compass her scheme, with
108    37|        deals the blow;~Should'st die a death too easy: since
109    37|  illustrious three had doomed to die,~Mid trouble, fear, and
110    38|        monarch) "wast content to die,~Thyself a ransom for our
111    38| willingly the Child by him would die.~But here I am at my full
112    40|           in how many a mode~Men die, you saw, and you to many
113    41|        of those unhappy men, who die~(So curst their lot) the
114    41|        with him to conquer or to die;~Wherefore, through this,
115    41|          my princely blood, will die.~ ~ XLV~"Ye may depart,
116    41|      narrow bounds confined,~And die, with hardship and with
117    42|     whose waters she embarked to die.~She to Marphisa afterwards
118    43|          arm.~Happier it were to die, than languish -- broke,~
119    43|          And finally resolved to die, so burned~His rage, but
120    43|         thou a hundred deaths to die:~And, though my pleasure
121    43|          wrought.~Anyhow I shall die; and -- that debt paid --~
122    43|    surpassing glory hallowed,~To die all living warriors should
123    44|       knight, she is resolved to die;~Nor, if this wrong she
124    44|        honey fraught.~But I will die ere I the Child forsake,~
125    44|           rather than endure it, die?~ ~ LIV~"What shall I do?
126    44|        Heaven! far rather I will die.~ ~ LVI~"Nay die I will
127    44|          I will die.~ ~ LVI~"Nay die I will not; but with better
128    44|      with better right~Shall Leo die, who so disturbs my joy;~
129    45|          not one, the Child will die.~ ~ LVIII~Right sure he
130    45|        LVIII~Right sure he is to die; if he forego~The lady,
131    45|    damsel not his own.~ ~ LIX~To die is he disposed; but how
132    45|          he disposed; but how to die~Cannot as yet the sorrowing
133    45|          he smote her not, or -- die he smite --~Smote, where
134    45|          damsel will avenge, and die,~(Nor this disturbs me)
135    45|        desperate was and bent to die,~And he, as best he could,
136    45|        nothing else can do, will die,~By poison or her own good
137    45|          fair son have risked to die;~Nor Charlemagne for this,
138    46|          turned aside;~And so to die of hunger he designed:~But
139    46|         The best of knights will die of all, who don,~Or e'er
140    46|        relief remains to thee to die:~But be content awhile this
141    46|      more content, that I should die.~Know me for him so hated
142    46|     succour -- wouldst of sorrow die."~ ~ XLV~These words he
143    46|      grieved,~He had resolved to die, and, almost dead,~Was only
144    46|         some other evil death to die,~About whose brows the sable
145    46|       death would she consent to die,~If she withal could suffer
146    46|      deed of shame, preferred to die,~Writhed, struggled, and
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